NEW YORK - The steroid prednisolone is no better at reducing the symptoms of a
sinus infection than a placebo, according to a new study.
It's possible that the steroid is
simply less powerful than the body's own abilities to fight infection, said Dr.
Richard Rosenfeld, a professor at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and the chair
of otolaryngology, who was not involved in this study.
"If you just let nature take
its course, the vast majority will clear up on their own," Rosenfeld told
Reuters Health.
Researchers had suspected that an
oral steroid might eliminate infections sooner than letting them run their
course, because steroid nasal sprays have shown a small benefit in getting
people to feel better a few days earlier.
"With a nose spray, the
nasal discharge might prevent getting the steroids in the nasal sinuses, so we
thought that administering these (systemic) corticosteroids might have some
beneficial effects," said Dr. Roderick Venekamp, the lead author of the
study and a researcher at University Medical Center Utrecht in The Netherlands.
Venekamp and his colleagues asked
174 patients who had come to see their doctors for nasal symptoms to take
either 30 milligrams per day of prednisolone or placebo pills for one week.
The participants had experienced
nasal discharge or congestion and facial pain for at least five days.
They didn't know whether they
were assigned to the prednisolone group or the placebo group.
For two weeks, the people in the
study kept a diary of their symptoms.
The researchers, who published
their findings in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, found that, for the
most part, the symptoms lasted just as long in the steroid group as they did in
the placebo group, between seven and nine days.
Also, a similar number of
patients in each group felt totally free of symptoms within a week.
Among those who took steroids, 33
per cent reported no symptoms after one week, and among those who took fake
pills, 25 per cent reported no more symptoms.
Similarly, 63 per cent of people
in the steroid group reported no facial pain or pressure after one week, as did
56 per cent of people in the placebo group.
The researchers determined that
these differences could have been due to chance, rather than to the medication.
Based on the findings, "we
feel that systemic corticosteroids are not beneficial for the large
population," Venekamp told Reuters Health.
He said that perhaps some types
of patients might benefit, but more research is needed to find out who they
are.
'DON'T USE AN ORAL STEROID'
In the meantime, patients are
left with few options.
Previous studies have found that
nasal spray steroids increase the chances of feeling better by only seven per
cent - meaning that only one of out 15 people who take them will benefit.
Steroids also carry a risk of
side effects, such as bone loss, for people who are on them long term, and
physicians have expressed concern about the overuse of the medications.
Antibiotics don't seem to offer
much help to sinus infections either, and they too carry their own risks, such
as stomach upset and drug resistance.
Rosenfeld said nasal spray
decongestants and saline irrigation products, such as a neti pot, can help
relieve symptoms.
Ultimately, patience will help
see people through their infection and on to feeling better, said Rosenfeld,
whose own research has found that 73 per cent of people improve within seven to
12 days without taking antibiotics or steroids.
"The bottom line from this
study is, 'don't use an oral steroid,'" he said.
SOURCE: bit.ly/N97iMJ Canadian
Medical Association Journal, online August 7, 2012.
Reuters
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